Ho Gilbert, Takamatsu Yoshiki, Wada Ryoko, Sugama Shuei, Waragai Masaaki, Takenouchi Takato, Masliah Eliezer, Hashimoto Makoto
PCND Neuroscience Research Institute, Poway, CA, United States.
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo, Japan.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2020 Oct 28;12:576192. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2020.576192. eCollection 2020.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has been clearlylinked to oxidative stress and amylin amyloidosis in pancreatic β-cells. Yet despite extensive investigation, the biological significance of this is not fully understood. Recently, we proposed that Alzheimer's disease (AD)-relevant amyloidogenic proteins (APs), such as amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau, might be involved in evolvability against diverse stressors in the brain. Given the analogous cellular stress environments shared by both T2DM and AD, the objective of this study is to explore T2DM pathogenesis from the viewpoint of amyloidogenic evolvability. Similar to AD-related APs, protofibrillar amylin might confer resistance against the multiple stressors in β-cells and be transmitted to offspring to deliver stress information, in the absence of which, type 1 DM (T1DM) in offspring might develop. On the contrary, T2DM may be manifested through an antagonistic pleiotropy mechanism during parental aging. Such evolvability-associated processes might be affected by parental diabetic conditions, including T1DM and T2DM. Furthermore, the T2DM-mediated increase in AD risk during aging might be attributed to an interaction of amylin with AD-related APs through evolvability, in which amylin protofibrillar formation presumably caused by adiponectin (APN) resistance could increase protofibril formation of AD-related APs in evolvability and subsequently lead to T2DM promotion of AD through antagonistic pleiotropy in aging. This suggests that targeting APN combined with an anti-T2DM agent might be therapeutic against neurodegeneration. Collectively, T1DM and T2DM might be linked through amylin evolvability, and a better understanding of amyloidogenic evolvability might also reveal clues to therapeutic interventions for AD comorbid with T2DM.
2型糖尿病(T2DM)已被明确与胰腺β细胞中的氧化应激和胰岛淀粉样多肽淀粉样变性相关联。然而,尽管进行了广泛研究,其生物学意义仍未完全明晰。最近,我们提出阿尔茨海默病(AD)相关的淀粉样蛋白生成蛋白(APs),如淀粉样β蛋白(Aβ)和tau蛋白,可能参与大脑应对多种应激源的进化能力。鉴于T2DM和AD具有相似的细胞应激环境,本研究的目的是从淀粉样蛋白生成进化能力的角度探索T2DM的发病机制。与AD相关的APs类似,原纤维胰岛淀粉样多肽可能赋予β细胞对多种应激源的抗性,并传递给后代以传递应激信息,若缺乏该信息,后代可能会患1型糖尿病(T1DM)。相反,T2DM可能通过亲代衰老过程中的拮抗多效性机制表现出来。这种与进化能力相关的过程可能会受到亲代糖尿病状况的影响,包括T1DM和T2DM。此外,衰老过程中T2DM介导的AD风险增加可能归因于胰岛淀粉样多肽与AD相关APs通过进化能力的相互作用,其中脂联素(APN)抵抗可能导致的胰岛淀粉样多肽原纤维形成会在进化能力方面增加AD相关APs的原纤维形成,并随后通过衰老过程中的拮抗多效性导致T2DM促进AD。这表明靶向APN并联合抗T2DM药物可能对神经退行性变具有治疗作用。总体而言,T1DM和T2DM可能通过胰岛淀粉样多肽的进化能力相联系,更好地理解淀粉样蛋白生成进化能力也可能揭示与T2DM共病的AD治疗干预的线索。